Uploaded on 2017-01-26 by Andrew Petrisin
It is easy to go about your day not thinking of the immense complexity and engineering challenge it is to make somewhere like the Seattle fish market work. Transportation infrastructure must give access to the area, water and pluming must work in order for any restaurant or bathroom to work, electricity must power... everything. All of this infrastructure needs to be integrated into the wider city as well. Most of the time this all goes unnoticed. What is hidden in plain sight is what makes the place function--as is the nature of infrastructure. Much like the invisible information from Task 1; however, infrastructure in many cases isn't necessarily physically invisible, but invisible insofar as our mental picture of a place and it workings. Which brings about an interesting commentary. There is both invisible information regarding what is not seen in the picture, but what data can be extracted, as well as what is invisible to our mental conception of the place in the image.